Market View

Lululemon chief executive officer Christine Day said on a conference call Thursday for analysts and media that the company is actively seeking real estate for a store in the Hong Kong market after the success of its two showrooms there.

Plans also include the opening of an additional showroom in London next year and exploring the potential of as many as 15 markets in Europe and Asia over the next two years.

Vancouver-based Lululemon posted net profit of $57.3-million (U.S.) or 39 cents per share in the third quarter, compared with profit of $38.3-million or 27 cents in the year-earlier period.

Gross profit increased 36 per cent to $175.3-million in the quarter, but as a percentage of net revenue gross profit decreased to 55.4 per cent from 55.8 per cent in the third quarter of fiscal 2011.

Sales rose 37 per cent to $316.5-million from $230.2-million in the year-earlier period.

The company said in an updated outlook that it expects same-store sales in the fourth quarter to increase in the “high single digits.”

That compares with same-store sales growth of 26 per cent in last year’s fourth quarter.

For the third quarter, same-store sales -- a critical retail industry measure of sales at outlets open a year or more -- increased by 18 per cent.

“We expect a soft start to the [fourth] quarter,” Lululemon chief executive officer John Currie said on the call.

But he added that the company is in “a solid inventory position” for the fourth quarter.

Lululemon has experienced inventory problems over the past year as it tried to keep up with consumer demand.

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